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Archive for Sushi

Sushi Sonagi

Oct20

Restaurant: Sushi Sonagi

Location: 1425 Artesia Blvd UNIT 27, Gardena, CA 90248.

Date: March 2, 2024

Cuisine: Japanese Sushi (Omakase)

Rating: Awesome

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Situated inside of a historic South Bay strip mall, Sushi Sonagi is Daniel Son’s 8 seat Omakase sushi restaurant that serves to highlight and celebrate the rich sushi culture of Japan, Korea, and California summed up in an omakase.

Sushi Sonagi is a call to honor the spirit of sushi by utilizing the highest quality local ingredients as much as possible. Chef Daniel Son comes as a second generation sushi chef, trained at some of the best Michelin graced restaurants around the world, and is now venturing beyond to bring his journey and heart to his hometown of Gardena, California. The vision at Sushi Sonagi is a culmination of a menu inspired by Japanese and Korean cuisine, techniques, and hospitality that reflects the rich and diverse history of its region, South Bay, California.

With his humble and jovial nature, he continues to strive to hone his craft’s pursuit of perfection, and dreams that guests will enjoy a heartwarming meal at his counter. As such, Sushi Sonagi wishes to create a relaxed and intimate ambience for you and your dining partners.

Artesia strip mall location. Near several In-and-Outs.


Classic sushi bar.



Our menu.

Fish hanging out.

Very attractive room. Reminded me of Yamakase 1.0.


Chawanmush. Lion’s Mane, SB Uni, Gamtae.

Ankimo Tart. Astrea Kaluga Caviar.

Seki Saba Sando. Mackerel Sandwich. Inspired by Gion Rohan, Kyoto.

Madai. Sea Bream. Oita.

Shima Aji. Striped Jack. Kagoshima.

Shiro Ebi. Baby White Shrimp. Toyama.

Seki Aji. Horse Mackerel. Oita.

Katsuura Kinmedai. Golden Eye Snapper. Chiba.

Sawara. King Mackerel. Fukuoka.

Aorika. Big Reef Squid. Kagoshima.

Mirugai. Giant Clam. Canada.

Sumagatsuo. Winter Skipjack. Nagasaki.

Kohada. Gizzard Shad. Kumamoto.

Akagai. Ark Shell Clam. Korea.


Carabineros. Scarlet Shrimp. Spain.


Uni. Sea Urchin. Hokkaido.

Ganjang Gejang. Soy Fermented Crab. Korea.

Anago. Sea Eel. Nagasaki.


Dolsot Kuroawabi. Abalone Stone Pot Rice. Aomori.

Dungeness Crab Soup. Shingiku, Citrus. Oregon.

Miso Butter Atsuyaki Tamago. Miso Butter Omelet. Pretty amazing salty/sweet taste.

Sake Kasu Ice Cream. Miso Caramel, Bubu Arare. Hyogo.

Great wines.
Fun and fabulous dinner. Really on point sushi with exceptional balance by a local southland chef.

For more LA dining reviews click here.













Related posts:

  1. Food as Art – Sushi Sushi
  2. Sushi Sushi – Small Omakase
  3. Sushi Sushi = Yummy Yummy
  4. Sushi Sushi Sushi
  5. Newest Oldest Sushi
By: agavin
Comments (0)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Gardena, Japanese cuisine, Liz Lee, Nigiri, Sage Society, Southbay, Sushi, Sushi Sonagi, Wine

Raving about Miyagi

Sep01

Restaurant: Sushi Miyagi [ 1, 2, 3, 4 ]

Location: 150 S Barrington Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90049. (323) 382-5635

Date: December 15, 2023

Cuisine: Japanese Sushi

Rating: Top Shelf Omakase Sushi

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Great sushi is always a good excuse to pull out the beloved Champagnes and White Burgundies. Tonight’s Foodie Club theme was Raveneau.
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The unassuming storefront on the largely ignored side street that is S Barrington Ave.
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The space is small but attractive (these are pre covid pics).
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This is chef focused serious sushi, and so we pre-ordered the largest omakase possible — Erick even egged them on to a larger than offered menu. This picture is also pre-covid, post there is a plexiglass barrier across the bar and no bar seating.

Chef Shinichi Miyagi says about himself on his website:

Born in Osaka, the art of sushi mesmerized the chef at an early age and decided to devote his life as a “Decchi” (apprentice) under Master Higuchi at the age of 16. He opened his first “Kappo” (traditional style of cooking in front of a crowd) restaurant at the age of 25, and moved to LA at 29, working in numerous well known Sushi restaurants in West LA, Beverly Hills, and San Diego.

Through managing a Sushi restaurant in Manhattan Beach (i-naba), now in present day, he found an opportunity to try his skills as an executive chef in Brentwood/Los Angeles. The chefs many years of experience in choosing the freshest fish, will surprise even the most sophisticated pallets of this beautiful city.

His methods and techniques in preparation follows the traditional Japanese style, bringing out the true flavors of the fish. The chef also prepares two styles of rice, AKAZU SHARI (Red vinegar sushi rice), and SHIROZU SHARI (White vinegar rice). The SHARI (Sushi rice) will alternate depending on the fish being prepared, and we hope you enjoy the eclectic flavors of the different vinegars being used.Sushi Miyagi is exactly the kind of sushi place I like best — all omakase and very traditional. This is some seriously good fish. Mostly just straight nigiri and a bit of spectacular sashimi and a handful of cooked dishes. This is really really good and instantly catapulted into the top westside sushi joints. Very friendly too. Intimate as well. Sushi at this level is all about the chef and Shinichi Miyagi is very talented.

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Appetizer plate with oyster and caviar (left), sea squirt (top), monkfish liver (front), Japanese conche (right), and fried river crab (back right).
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Sashimi plate with two whitefish and smoked bonito.
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Shirako (cod fish sperm sacks), boiled, with ponzu. This is my favorite prep.
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Fried oyster and clam with mustard sauce.
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Sekogani (female snow crab). Super succulent with that deep crab flavor and lots of roe.

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Snapper.
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Hokkaido scallop.
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Shimaji. Stripped jack.
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White fish with liver. Quite interesting.
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Lightly seared fish.
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Salmon.
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Can’t remember.
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Awesome maguro.
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Toro.
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Sardine or mackerel, oily and marinated.
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Clam.
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Seared Baby barracuda.
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Snapper with truffle.
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Hokkaido uni.
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Seared A5 beef sushi (awesome).
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Dashi with noodles.
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Crab hand roll.
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Truffle ice cream.
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Tea.
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The gang.
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Sushi Miyagi is exactly the kind of sushi place I like best — all omakase and very traditional. This is some seriously good fish. Mostly just straight nigiri and a bit of spectacular sashimi and a handful of cooked dishes. This is really really good and instantly catapulted into the top westside sushi joints. Very friendly too. Intimate as well. Sushi at this level is all about the chef and Shinichi Miyagi is very talented.

Not for the sushi neophytes and roll lovers, but fabulous for those of us who really enjoy great fish being showcased in a straightforward and delicious manner.

For more LA dining reviews click here.

Related posts:

  1. Sushi Miyagi Apres
  2. Mr. Miyagi’s Sushi Bar
  3. Summer Miyagi
  4. Uh no, Takao again!
  5. Takao Reprise
By: agavin
Comments (0)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Brentwood, Chablis, Foodie Club, ravenau, Sushi

Emperor Yamamoto

Aug30

Restaurant: 鮨やまもと / Sushi Yamamoto

Location: N Rodeo Dr, Beverly Hills, CA 90210

Date: December 14, 2023

Cuisine: Japanese Sushi

Rating: One of the best meals of the year

_

And so we come to the Foodie Club’s epic End of Year Blowout!
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At one of LA’s most elite sushi spots, up stairs on Rodeo in the old Ginza Sushiko spot.
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The sushi bar
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Our special menu.
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Ginger. I had about 10 of these.
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Kichiji-rock fish in dashi. Mild and delicious. Super soft and tender.
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Astrea caviar of course.
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Kyoto fresh bean curd with caviar. Very grassy soy flavor. Texture like very fresh burrata.
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Kinmedai-goldeneye snapper sashimi. The peppery yuzu-kosho was awesome.
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Tri of tunas.
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Taka’s chu-toro.
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Taka’s o-otoro.
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Taka’s maguro in a tiny handroll.
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Benny’s shrimp.
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Buri (wild yellow tail).
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Saba (mackerel).
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Hokkigai (surf clam)

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Sekogani (female snow crab) with crab sauce. Super succulent with that deep crab flavor and lots of roe. The soft silky sauce really took it up a level too.
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Hokkaido uni (sea urchin).
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Astrea Caviar Toro roll.
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House-made buckwheat soba noodles.
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Shrimp soba (hot). Perfect soba with that awesome slightly soggy perfect tempura shrimp.
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Cold soba with caviar. Also great, but I preferred the hot.
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Unagi (fresh water eel). Super soft.
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Tamago (sweet egg).
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A tro of birthday cakes!

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Satsuma Tangerine Ice Cream. Very mild.
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A tro of Sweet Milk Gelato (Choco-mole, Orange Old Fashioned, and Bakewell Tart).
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Basque Cheesecake with Caviar and Stawberry Cake.
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Tea.
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Uh. Wow! Pretty incredible evening, although I got home at 1am!
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For more LA dining reviews click here.

Related posts:

  1. Lucky Noodle King is the Dan Dan Emperor
  2. Let’s Go Again
  3. Sushi Sushi = Yummy Yummy
  4. Coche In at Brothers Santa Monica
  5. The Valley’s Secret Sushi|Bar
By: agavin
Comments (0)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Beverly Hills, BYOG, Caviar, crab, Eve, Foodie Club, Fu, Gelato, Japanese Sushi, Sushi, Wine, Yamamoto

OOtoro 2023 part deux

Jul31

Restaurant: OOToro [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11]

Location: 1569 Fairway Dr, Walnut, CA 91789. (909) 598-8299

Date: November 4, 2023

Cuisine: Japanese Sushi (with slight nod to China)

Rating: Ends of the earth, but very good

_

Chef Kaz of Totoraku, an occasional hedonist, sent us far east to this Sushi restaurant in 2016 and it was such a fun time that we had to return again for a sixth visit — it’s now become a twice a year thing.

 And by far east I mean REALLY REALLY far east — to Walnut California. 40+ miles from my house. 20 miles past Alhambra (which most people consider to far to drive for food). It took an hour and twenty minutes on a Saturday night!

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Look how clear it is after the rains (and snows).

The slick looking location is in the heart of the affluent Chinese American San Gabriel Valley. But yes, it’s Japan, if perhaps catering to Chinese taste. This photo was shot at about 10pm after everyone else had left.

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Here is the private room — the only way to go.

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They put up this weird curtain recently.

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Uni, crab, caviar and some kind of ponzu jelly. Nice chunky crab but that cheap non-sturgeon caviar.
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The yellow stick was a bit of crunchy fish roe, then proceeding right we have tender Abalone, Shirako (cod sperm sacks and always a favorite of mine) and some kind of fish tempura.
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Zoom.
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Wagyu tartar, fried seaweed, uni, truffle, and avocado. A great tartar bite with nice textural contrasts.
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Tri of oysters: Caviar, uni, and Ikura (salmon roe). All great.
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Hokkaido live scallops with caviar (more real this time) and Hokaido uni. A bit of fresh yuzu juice really “juiced” this up.
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Sashimi plate of Shima Aji, Blue fin tuna, and Otoro with two slices of Monkfish liver.
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Spanish Mackerel. Oily and delicious.
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Golden Eye Snapper nigiri.
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Skipjack Tuna with a bit of spicy ponzu.
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Kama Toro. The always butter-like richest bit of tuna!
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Seared Ruby Snapper Nigiri with some sweet miso. They called this the Queen of the Whitefish.
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Charcoal grilled crab leg.
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The awesome “BBQ Kama Toro” plate. It’s like ducky tuna and fishy smoked duck and is incredibly rich and delicious. Great with that special soy too.
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Flaming sea snail with mushrooms. Chewy.
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A5 Wagyu Tataki. Seared with a bit of pepper. Supper rich and fatty and melt in your mouth.
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Clam Miso. Awesome clammy flavor.
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Cheesecake with strawberries.
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Strawberry Jam Gelato — an awesome daily Strawberry base swirled with Strawberry Jam — made by me for @sweetmilkgelato — sugar time! — #SweetMilkGelato #gelato #dessert #icecream #FrozenDessert #nomnom #dessertlovers #dessertporn #icecreamlovers #gelatoitaliano #foodporn #gelatolover #food #foodgasm #foodblogger #dessertgasm #desserttime #foodphotography #gelatoartigianale #gelatomania #dessertlover #icecream #icecreamlovers #strawberry #jam
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Perfect pairing!
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Another great meal at ootoro. A bit of an overlap with last time but every dish was great.

For more LA dining reviews click here,

or more crazy Hedonist dinners here!

 

Related posts:

  1. OOToro Spring
  2. Post OOToro
  3. OOToro Double
  4. OOToro Holiday
  5. OOToro Five O
By: agavin
Comments (0)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: BYOG, Champagne, Gelato, Hacienda Heights, Japanese cuisine, ootoro, Sushi, Wine

Iki Ramen Insanity

Jul01

Restaurant: Iki Ramen

Location: 740 S Western Ave #115, Los Angeles, CA 90005. (424) 419-2772

Date: August 24, 2023

Cuisine: Modern Japanese

Rating: Big fun!

_

Michael K organized this omakase buyout at Iki Ramen.
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Dreams do come true for these 4 best friends. 👏
Jeffry Undiarto (former n/naka GM), childhood friends Sabastian Karyadi (owner of ramen nagomi in New Jersey and formerly work at Mori sushi in LA) and chefs Hiroyuki Masato (formerly owner Poke Tendo, chef and manager at sushi chain sushi Mac) and Andy Juliady (owner seafood company based in downtown LA), together they co-founded Iki Ramen.
Giant shoutout to Michael organizing this private dinner to create more fantastic memories with new & old friends 🥰 Mary A Chevy Bonnie Joe Andy Erick Larry Brent Sebastian Aedyn Brad Gordan Conrad David Emily Fred Danielle David Linda Jio Jovi Jordan 🥂🍾🍷
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The interior before we swamped it out.
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A salad of white fish sashimi, greens, yuzu koshu, and pear. Very zesty and delicious.
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Just a few of the bottles.
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Tuna with truffle and a sweet soy. Delicious.
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Incredibly tender octopus with sunomono.
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Miso glazed cod.
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White fish “custard” (more a thickened stock)?
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Uni and squid ink pasta with truffles. This was an incredible pasta with a great chewy texture and absolutely delicious briny flavors.
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Scallop, burrata, and tomatoes. Who would have thought this would have paired — but it really did.
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Salmon, Tai, and crab sushi.
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Toro, uni, and wagyu sushi.
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Ginger.
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Yuzu Shio Ramen. Yuzu citrus + sea salt seasoned organic chicken broth+house dashi. slow-braised niman ranch pork belly, hanjuku tamago, menma, nori, scallions. Really awesome and complex flavor.

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Soft Shell Crab Bao. fried soft shell crab bao, cucumber, spicy mayo, chili garlic.

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Cucumber Cut Roll.
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Hand rolls.
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Uni Sushi.
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Toro sushi (chopped).
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Truffle Butter Tonkotsu. Rich, shoyu seasoned pork bone stock, with truffle butter, pork belly, egg, kikurage, sweet corn, scallions, nori. Very rich.
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Toro Uni Ikura don. Sushi rice, toro tartare, sea urchin, dashi ikura.
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Crispy Japanese dessert. The shell wasn’t sweet at all, but it was crunchy.
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Coconut Crunch Gelato — Coconut dairy custard base with Strawberry Wafers and house-made White Chocolate Coated Crunch Berries — made by me for @sweetmilkgelato — #dessert #icecream #FrozenDessert #nomnom #dessertlovers #dessertporn #icecreamlovers #gelatoitaliano #foodporn #gelatolover #food #foodgasm #foodblogger #dessertgasm #desserttime #foodphotography #gelatoartigianale #gelatomania #dessertlover #icecream #icecreamlovers #coconut #crunch #crunchBerries #WhiteChocolate
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Almond Gelato and Chocolate Expresso Sorbetto

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Just a few bottles — the whole front row were ours!

Overall, this was a crazy fun evening. 23 people, very chaotic, over 30 wines, and tons of food. We had the whole place to ourselves so it was just a bit of a party. There were so many wines that things didn’t really run out either. Good times — except for the next morning.

For more LA dining reviews click here.

For more LA Chinese dining reviews click here.

Related posts:

  1. Far Eastern Ramen
  2. Tatsu – Ramen with a Soul
  3. Jinya Ramen Bar
  4. It’s not really Silverlake Ramen
  5. Chicken or Egg? – Tentenyu Ramen
By: agavin
Comments (0)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: BYOG, Gelato, Japanese cuisine, ramen, Ski Ramen, Sushi, Wine

Brothers Shunji

May28

Restaurant: The Brothers Sushi Santa Monica — but not — Shunji Hashiba

Location: 1008 Montana Ave #1, Santa Monica, CA 90403. (424) 330-0270

Date: July 8, 2023

Cuisine: Toyko Sushi

Rating: Awesome — maybe the best sushi I’ve had in the states

_

Our Foodie Gang has been going to the incredible “The Brothers Sushi” in the valley for some time now, and it was with much glee that we welcomed in the brand new (and somewhat delayed) Montana Santa Monica location. Now it’s become a bit of a staple spot for us.

This meal was special, with Brothers owner Mark hosting Shunji Hashiba, the No.1 Protégé of Tokyo’s world-renowned 3 Michelin star Sushi Saito.1A4A2024-Pano
The space used to be the repulsive Louise’s Trattoria, serving not exactly Italian for decades. But Brother’s has given it a major new makeover.

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The build out is gorgeous. Here the bar is for omakase only and the tables are for à la carte only.
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More details.

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Shunji Hashiba, the No.1 Protégé of Tokyo’s world-renowned 3 Michelin star Sushi Saito, came to Los Angeles for a special pop-up event. July 8th, 9th and 10th. This was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for Angelenos to experience one of the most exclusive introduction-only sushiya in the world on US soil.
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Of course I’ve eaten at Brother’s itself countless times and really enjoy the cooking of chef Mark O — who was hosting Chef Shunji for this special event.
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The menu.
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Welcome glass of rose champagne.
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The first of our Otsumami dishes, a “welcome dashi.” I small glass of unsalted perch bone stock. Mellow, fishy, delicious, and a perfect cure for any common cold.
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Chef Shunji at work.
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Kinmedai Sesame Tofu.. Homemade sesame tofu, Goldeneye snapper, Seaweed. Warm sauce, cool fish. Lovely. Salty. Very savory. Had one of those delectable soft squishy textures that many Americans might find “odd.”
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Steamed Grouper Sushi. Sushi rice, peas, nori, ginger. Really incredible textures and subtle flavor. The fish was cooked but incredibly moist, like it had been oil poached. The overall blend was just very comforting.
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Incredible sake. One of the most fruity I’ve ever had.
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Sea Urchin Corn Chawamushi. Sweet corn, Hokaido Uni, Purple something. An absolutely stunning custard. Sweet (from the corn) and salty, with this incredible soft texture puncuated by bits of slightly chewy. There was also a stachy gooey texture not unlike that produced by cooked okra.
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Tuna Cheek Tamayaki with Shunji’s special blended Shichimi salt. Two chunks of cooked tuna: kama toro and cheek. One was darker are even more meaty than the other. But were so rich, almost beefy, and very clean tasting. Just perfect with the salty & limey special salt. Or the wasabi. Or both. Or the sunomono style cucumber pickles. Awesome dish.
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You can see the special salt better here. It was so good I was eating it plain after I finished the fish. There was some kind of ground citrus rind in there, probably one of the Japanese ones like Yuzu or its cousins. Awesome.
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Simmered Octopus. So ridiculously tender. Slightly sweet. I drank the sauce (which was the sweet part). Softest octopus I’ve ever had by a large margin.
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Pickles and pickled ginger. The ginger was very mild and didn’t really have any sweetness. There was also cerely and some other bit. I love pickles. Unfortuantly they didn’t refresh them as I could have eaten several containers.
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White Baby Shrimp. Every fish tonight was from Japan. This was super soft. Slightly bitter (but good) finish.
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King Salmon Nigiri. Shunji marinated it in a soy based solution for a few minutes before forming the nigiri. The fish was melt in your mouth soft.
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Bigfin Reef Squid. A bit of yuzu juice and super tender.
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Mackerel. Super soft and not very “pickled” (if at all). Formed into one of those little nori “pinch rolls.”
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The second amazing sake.
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Chutoro. A cloud-like texture.
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Kohada Gizzard Shad. Strong in a great way with a bit of a ginger bite.
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Otoro. What can we say? Richer than the chutoro, but I actually prefered the cloud like texture of the latter.
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Akami Zuke. Amazing.
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Trout Caviar Sujiko. These are only available for 2 weeks a year! It’s basically like “underipe” Ikura. I’ve never had any type of trout/salmon roe as a nigri actually. Pretty awesome.
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Pink Unicorn sake!
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Hamaguri Clam. Sweet sauce like a great eel sauce.
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Sea Urchin Roll. Hokaido uni. I’ve never had an uni cut roll. Pretty awesome too.
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Whole abalone.
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Abalone nigiri. I didn’t know this was a thing. So tender. Definately the most tender abalone I’ve had, and I’ve had some pretty great ones.
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Futomaki Roll. Sort of a fancy eel and “new style” futomaki. The composition is traditional but it didn’t have that pink sugar stuff that they have in Japanese train stations. Delicious and more savory than the pure classic, but highly evocative of same as well.
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Miso Soup. Super nice.
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Tamago Sweet Egg. Not very sweet. Perfect texture.
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Special Melon. It’s been a while since I had one of these perfect Japanese melons. They really are THAT good. Soft, complex sweetness. Lovely.
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This was an incredible sushi meal and one of the best I’ve ever had. The style is more Japanese and subtle than we can usually get in LA. My current favorite here is Takeda, which is also amazing, but this reached a new level of textural mastery. Everything was just so ridiculously tender and perfectly balanced. Amazing!
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Chefs Shunji (left) and Mark (right)!
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The whole gang tonight. We had the entire resteraunt and I was a singleton in this group that all knew each other. One guy knows Erick indirectly, but not in person. They were incredibly nice and “took me in.”
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For more Sushi dining reviews click here.

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A different Eric who in that small-world way knows “my” Erick.

Related posts:

  1. Brothers Dom
  2. More Shunji Omakase
  3. Coche In at Brothers Santa Monica
  4. Food as Art – The Brothers Sushi
  5. Shunji Super Omakase
By: agavin
Comments (0)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Brothers Sushi, sake, Shunji Hashiba, Sushi

Brothers Dom

Mar10

Restaurant: The Brothers Sushi Santa Monica [1, 2, 3]

Location: 1008 Montana Ave #1, Santa Monica, CA 90403. (424) 330-0270

Date: June 6, 2023

Cuisine: Modern Sushi

Rating: Awesome (and close)!

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Our Foodie Gang has been going to the incredible “The Brothers Sushi” in the valley for some time now, and it was with much glee that we welcomed in the brand new (and somewhat delayed) Montana Santa Monica location. Now it’s become a bit of a staple spot for us.
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The space used to be the repulsive Louise’s Trattoria, serving not exactly Italian for decades. But Brother’s has given it a major new makeover.

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The build out is gorgeous. Here the bar is for omakase only and the tables are for à la carte only.
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Chef Mark Okuda on the left and his chef de cuisine Moriyuki Kanamaru.

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Oyster with yuzu, shiso, and sea salt. Bright and lovely.
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Firefly squid, basil udon, and tomato. The basil udon (more a spaghetti) was amazing.
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Sea bream with transparent shrimp, lotus root. Steamed with seaweed dashi. Very light and delicate.
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Smoked baby bluefin tuna with wasabi. Strong smoke flavor (which I like).
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What is Larry learning?
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Chawanmushi with hairy crab, Hokaido uni, shiso, and sweet corn. Soft and delectable.
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Maryland soft shell crab. Very zesty and lovely miso dressing.
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Saba. Nice and oily.
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Cherry Salmon. Super soft and lightly smokey. Cured in kelp.
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Fan clam with Hokaido uni and salt. Very unusual and delciious.
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Tuna. Superb balance of soy and tuna flavors with a long briny finish.
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Goldeneye snapper.
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Dry aged o-toro. So good. Just incredible.
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Wagyu truffle.
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WOTN — haha.
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Shima aji.
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Uni risotto with sea perch, ikura, and wasabi. Unique and wonderful.
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Another o-toro — had to do it!
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Sea Eel.
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Negi toro handroll. Incredible.
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Clam miso.
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Uni crab handroll. Lots of uni!
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Strawberry Jam Gelato — an awesome dairly Strawberry base swirled with Strawberry Jam — made by me for @sweetmilkgelato — sugar time! — #SweetMilkGelato #gelato #dessert #icecream #FrozenDessert #nomnom #dessertlovers #dessertporn #icecreamlovers #gelatoitaliano #foodporn #gelatolover #food #foodgasm #foodblogger #dessertgasm #desserttime #foodphotography #gelatoartigianale #gelatomania #dessertlover #icecream #icecreamlovers #strawberry #jam
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Sweet milk strawberry gelato with Harry’s Berries and a jelly.
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Roasted Tea.

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Overall an incredible night of incredible eats and some really fabulous wine. Lots and lots of P2! These were all so young, even the 96s! The 2008 1996 had a little age on it, but still.
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Overall, another perfect night of sushi and champagne!

Instantly Brother’s Santa Monica has leapt into the top tier of westside sushi bars along with Miyagi and Shunji. It’s combination of perfect nigri and very refined “other dishes” are really great. It’s slightly different from woodland hills in personality, with some dishes in common and some specific to each — just enough to keep things interesting.

For more Sushi dining reviews click here.

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Related posts:

  1. Coche In at Brothers Santa Monica
  2. Brothers Sushi Two
  3. Food as Art – The Brothers Sushi
  4. Let’s Go Again
  5. Sasabune – Dueling Omakases
By: agavin
Comments (0)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Brothers Sushi, BYOG, Dom Pérignon (wine), Gelato, Montana, Santa Monica, Sushi, Wine

To Tama

Feb02

Restaurant: Sushi Tama

Location: 116 N Robertson Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90048. (424) 249-3009

Date: May 15, 2023

Cuisine: Sushi

Rating: Solid Beverly Hills Sushi

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Kaz (from Totoraku) invited us to try this favorite sushi spot of his.
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Right across from The Ivy.
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Edamame.
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Baby squid with miso sauce.
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Super tender and succulent with that “in a good way” taste of the sea.

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Clams in “butter broth.” It was a delicious clam broth with a bit of butter and plenty of salt.
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Cubes of Seared Toro (tuna belly) with yuzu koshu. The salty/spicy zing of the yuzu koshu offsets the fatty char nicely.
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Seared Wagyu. A soft, nice bite, but just a single bite.
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Wasabi and ginger as usual.
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Halibut fin.
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Salmon. Very good salmon actually.
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Seared Hokaido scallop with toasted seaweed. Very enjoyable combo.
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Saba (Japanese Mackerel).
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Chu toro. Totally yummy as always.
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Hamachi. The most boring type.
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Sweet shrimp. Very nice.
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Sardine or some other small fish. I like these and enjoy the oily fish taste.
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Ikura (salmon roe). Extremely nice marinated ikura.
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Spanish Mackerel.
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Charred Sea Eel. Lovely.
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Hokaido Uni. Super tender and sweet.
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Clam Miso. This is always one of my favorite misos as I feel the clams add a nice equally saline complement to the miso’s inherent salinity.
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Fresh crab handroll.
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A kind of elevated Futomaki. Tuna, Ikura, Takuan, and chives. Excellent.
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Wasn’t cheap — but it is Beverly Hills.
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Overall, Tama was a very enjoyable “classic” sushi place. There aren’t a lot of “new style” or ponzu covered dishes, which is nice. This is mostly classic Japanese fare and well executed Tokyo style nigiri. It’s very much in the sushi tradition I grew up with in the 70s and 80s. This is the kind of place like the late lamented sushi sushi that I’d happily go by myself at lunch for a straight up “good sushi” fix.

For more dining reviews click here.

Related posts:

  1. Food as Art: Sasabune
  2. Sushi Sushi Sushi
  3. Sasabune – Dueling Omakases
  4. Sushi Sushi = Yummy Yummy
  5. Kiriko Days – a la Carte
By: agavin
Comments (0)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Japanese cuisine, Kaz, Sushi, Tama

OOToro Spring

Dec01

Restaurant: OOToro [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]

Location: 1569 Fairway Dr, Walnut, CA 91789. (909) 598-8299

Date: April 1, 2023

Cuisine: Japanese Sushi (with slight nod to China)

Rating: Ends of the earth, but very good

_

Chef Kaz of Totoraku, an occasional hedonist, sent us far east to this Sushi restaurant in 2016 and it was such a fun time that we had to return again for a sixth visit — it’s now become a twice a year thing. This is my second return since the pandemic — although some in the group went once in the middle for a meal that was supposedly not quite up to snuff. Because a bunch of us have engaged in a special Sushi Series this fall (tasting all the best LA sushi places) I figured I’d include OOToro in the mix.

 And by far east I mean REALLY REALLY far east — to Walnut California. 40+ miles from my house. 20 miles past Alhambra (which most people consider to far to drive for food). It took an hour and twenty minutes on a Saturday night!

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Look how clear it is after the rains (and snows).

The slick looking location is in the heart of the affluent Chinese American San Gabriel Valley. But yes, it’s Japan, if perhaps catering to Chinese taste. This photo was shot at about 10pm after everyone else had left.

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Here is the private room — the only way to go.

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They put up this weird curtain recently.

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We ordered the $250 Omakase.
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First course of various little morsels.
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Marinated Baby Squid. Soft and juicy!
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Baby Japanese Sea Snail. Quite tasty.
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Shirako (aka cod sperm sac) with a bit of soy/ponzu. Awesome.
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Steamed Abalone. Very tender, but not the strongest (or most intense) abalone I’ve had.
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Fried Potato Wrapped Shrimp “Tempura.”
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Sashimi course. OToro in the back (super soft). Needlefish in the middle. Squid with bad caviar in front with Uni blobi and Half a Live Octopus sucker with sour plum sauce (great).
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Special house-made soy sauce that was actually incredible. I kept it all evening. It was so good it made me eat all the garnish and seaweed (with the soy). Even the shiso flower!
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Live shrimp in front with wasabi and oyster with uni and ikura. They took head away for later.
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Cooked belt fish.
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Parfait of Uni, terrible truffle caviar, some kind of jelly, and crab salad. Once the bad caviar with its truffle oil taste was gone the jelly and crab salad was wonderful.
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From the side.
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Aji (Spanish Mackerel) Tataki. Lovely!

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We went out and looked at the wine cabinet and low and behold there were some Leroys. Turns out they were cheaper than retail!
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Duo of whitefish sushi, snapper specifically. The left was Red Snapper and the right Goldeneye Snapper.
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Awesome ginger.
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The “money plate” with OToro on the right and Kama Toro (collar) on the left. So good!
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Skipjack Tuna with garlic and numbing chili crisp! The chili crisp was a new twist and actually kinda delicious.
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Uni Toast! So good.
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Turns out they had a whole tuna collar “in stock” tonight (the kama part) and we were able to order it.
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An hour or so later out came the awesome “BBQ Kama Toro” plate. It’s like ducky tuna and fishy smoked duck and is incredibly rich and delicious. Great with that special soy too.
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Yarom flintstones the bone.
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Flaming Sea Snail with mushrooms. Creature alert!
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Chawanmushi (egg custard) with shrimp, ikura (salmon roe), and hairy crab. This was wonderful and it was also presented with a leg of hairy crab.
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The beef dish came out in these cute covered cooking boxes.
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Inside was A5 Wagyu they cook tableside.
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A5 Wagyu. Super tender and melt in your mouth.
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The return of the heads.
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Shrimp head miso.
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Fried shrimp head for brain sucking fun.
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Pure and Concentrated Evil — Kentucky Mud Pie Gelato — Expresso Knob Creek Bourbon Custard Gelato base with layers of house-made Crushed Oreo Valrhona Fudge Ganache, and house-made Vanilla Coconut Cream Cheese Icing — The Plaid Mode of Gelati and includes a hefty Caffeine kick — made by me for @sweetmilkgelato — #dessert #icecream #FrozenDessert #nomnom #dessertlovers #dessertporn #icecreamlovers #gelatoitaliano #foodporn #gelatolover #food #foodgasm #foodblogger #dessertgasm #desserttime #foodphotography #gelatoartigianale #gelatomania #dessertlover #icecream #icecreamlovers #coconut #valrhona #chocolate #ganache #expresso #bourbon #custard #oreos #icing
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Two of us grabbed these Leroys.
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Overall, this was one of the best OOToro’s ever. Every dish was great — only exception being that gross caviar, but it didn’t ruin any dishes — and the preparation (hard to say cooking) was very on point. The collar as always really took it up a notch. Plus we had a great group with some first timers and a lot of very good wines.
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The epic wine lineup.

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After dinner we returned to the always fun valley view parking lot. Big plus over that miserable hotel across the street from Ootoro. Only problem was that it was cold and that on the way home an accident had the 60 closed for over an hour — so I got home almost at 1am.

For more LA dining reviews click here,

or more crazy Hedonist dinners here!

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Related posts:

  1. OOToro Holiday
  2. OOToro Double
  3. OOToro Five O
  4. Post OOToro
  5. O OOToro
By: agavin
Comments (0)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: BYOG, Gelato, ootoro, SGV, Sushi, toro, Tuna, Uni, Wine

Inside Asanebo

Oct15

Restaurant: Asanebo [1, 2]

Location: 11941 Ventura Blvd, Studio City, CA 91604. (818) 760-3348

Date: March 1, 2023

Cuisine: Japanese

Rating: Very good creative Japanese

_

Asanebo has been a high end valley classic spot for a long time and we come periodically to enjoy the omakase. The previous meal is detailed here.

Chef Tetsuya Nakao came to America in 1982. Him and his younger brother, Shunji, were the original chefs that helped start Matsuhisa in Beverly Hills. After establishing the restaurant as one of the best in Los Angeles, the Nakao brothers ventured out to start their own place. “Asanebo” opened in September 26, 1991. Over the years, “Asanebo” was recognized as one of the top Japanese restaurants from Zagat, LA Times, LA Weekly, and more.

“Asanebo” also accomplished one Michelin Stars in 2008 and the other in 2009. It is part of chef Tetsuya’s standards to provide the best quality fish, meat, vegetables, and other ingredients possible to his customers. Not only is the food so great, but it is his warm character that brings in new customers from all over the world.

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Post pandemic they have this nice outside tend/patio in the parking lot.
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The menu is big with a mix of traditional and that style of late 1990s and 00s LA Japanese that is heavily Matsuhisa influenced but not focused on the style over substance greatest hits (Katana and Sushi Roku I’m looking at you). It’s much closer in both period and style to Takao.

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Chawanmushi. Santa Barbara uni. Wasabi. Ikura. Strong Dashi flavor. Lovely.

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Carrot Salad. Ruby and Gold Carrot, arugula, portabella mushroom, seared Hoikido Scallop. The texture was nice, although the salad itself lacked acidity. The scallop was great though.
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Seafood stick. Shrimp, White Fish, Shitake Mushroom, Shiso, Citrus Pepper Paste, Sweet Onion Salsa. Really great dish. That salsa would make anything taste amazing.
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Lemon Basil King Salmon Sashimi. New Zealand King Salmon, Marinated Ikura, Olive Oil, Grapeseed Oil, Garlic, and Lemon Basil Dressing. This was incredible, and very zesty. Probably my dish of the night.
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Halibut. Italian Truffle. Sweet ponzu. Pickled cherry tomato. A bit too sweet and distracting.
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Albacore, garlic, ginger, and ponzu sauce.
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Sazae on Fire. Japanese Conch, Quail Egg, Shimegi Mushrooms. Nice little “clam soup” in the creature’s shell. Disturbing if you think abot it.
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A5 wagyu with heirloom tomato and peach. Very sweet classic Japanese flavor.
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A5 sizzled with enoki mushroom, truffle butter, and truffles.
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Small flight of sushi. Mackerel, Blue fin tuna, Snapper, and Chu-toro.
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White fish sushi and crab battleship.
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Toro Takuan Roll (awesome).
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New Flavor — Cherry Bakewell Tart Gelato — While watching every episode of the Great British Baking Show I was introduced to the Bakewell Tart, which I liked it enough to make a gelato — Sicilian Noto Romano Almond Custard Base is layered with house-made Honey Almond Graham Crackers and Cherry Preserves. For extra fun I made an Almond Icing and glazed the Grahams with it in the traditional pattern (first time trying it) — made by me for @sweetmilkgelato –#SweetMilkGelato #gelato #dessert #icecream #FrozenDessert #nomnom #dessertlovers #dessertporn #icecreamlovers #gelatoitaliano #foodporn #gelatolover #food #foodgasm #foodblogger #desserttime #foodphotography #gelatoartigianale #dessertlover #icecream #icecreamlovers #Sicily #Almond #Cherry #GrahamCracker #BakewellTart #tart #bakewell #jam #icing
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The full wine lineup.
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Sadly a little advanced, had to open the PYCM as backup.
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A little advanced as well, heavy with no acid.
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Very nice and surprisingly young.
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Great.
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Awesome.
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Asanebo has been around since 1991 and as he was an early chef at Matsuhisa (along with his brother Shunji) the food very much reflects that. Like Takao (also at Matsuhisa) it’s positioned somewhere between a classic broad menu 1980s style sushi place and the more Peruvian influence Nobu style. But it’s definitely got strong California influences from the 1990s in a way I never saw in Japan during that period. While the style here is a bit 1990s (unlike Shunji who has massively “updated” recently) the execution remains excellent. I myself do slightly prefer either the very updated traditional or modern styles at the top end right now but there is no question that Asanebo is a great place and thoroughly enjoyable. It’s also not as expensive as the painfully bleeding edge places at current like Kaneyoshi.

For more LA dining reviews click here.

Related posts:

  1. Asanebo Evening
  2. The Inside Story
  3. Inside Game of Thrones
  4. Shunji Sushi – Nonstop Nigiri
  5. Gasping Fish Shunji
By: agavin
Comments (0)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Asanebo, BYOG, Gelato, hedonists, Japanese, Sushi

Salon Sushi

Jul27

Restaurant: The Brothers Sushi Santa Monica [1, 2]

Location: 1008 Montana Ave #1, Santa Monica, CA 90403. (424) 330-0270

Date: December 13, 2022

Cuisine: Modern Sushi

Rating: Awesome (and close)!

_

Our Foodie Gang has been going to the incredible “The Brothers Sushi” in the valley for some time now, and it was with much glee that we welcomed in the brand new (and somewhat delayed) Montana Santa Monica location. Now it’s become a bit of a staple spot for us.
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The space used to be the repulsive Louise’s Trattoria, serving not exactly Italian for decades. But Brother’s has given it a major new makeover.

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The build out is gorgeous. Here the bar is for omakase only and the tables are for à la carte only.
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Chef Mark Okuda on the left and his chef de cuisine Moriyuki Kanamaru.

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The gang.
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All salon!
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Well, a bottle or two to warm up.
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We had most of the sushi bar.
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1997 Salon Champagne Blanc de Blancs Brut. BH 95. An elegant and very fresh but distinctly yeasty nose of stupendous breadth leads to incredibly intense, pure, detailed and vibrant flavors that possess superb depth and simply knockout length. This is a powerful Salon and even though it doesn’t have the solid acid spine of the very best vintages, this compensates by its approachability and terrific mouth feel. This could be drunk now or aged, depending on one’s preference. If you can find it, I would lay in a case and drink it selectively over the next 20 years.
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1999 Salon Champagne Blanc de Blancs Brut. VM 94. The 1999 belongs to the family of warm, ripe vintage at Salon. An atypically big, dense wine by Salon standards, the 1999 is somewhat one-dimensional and not likely to improve considerably from here. At the same time, the 1999 has more than enough depth to drink well for a number of years. All things considered, the 1999 has held up well. Didier Depond, the house’s President, describes 1999 as a year with very hot, sunny weather during the summer and into the harvest. Late season rains were an issue for the Pinot, but not for the Chardonnay. (Drink between 2016-2031)
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White shrimp from Japan, Hokkaido Sea Urchin, with shaved white truffle. Very rich and decadant.
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1 week dry-aged ono from Mie prefecture, along with momotaro tomatoes and ice plant. A bit of delicious acidity in the sauce and very “edible” tomatoes (aka not a strong nightshade taste). The texture of the ice plant was fabulous.
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Smokey!
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1 week dry-aged cherry-wood smoked yellowtail (buri). I love the smoky flavor — makes me think of ski lodges.
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Hokkaido Shirako (cod sperm sack) Chawanmushi (egg custard) with Oregon white pine mushrooms. One of the best chawanmushi I’ve had. Perfect silky texture and great flavor.
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San Francisco Dungeness crab and sweet corn croquettes with wasabi aioli and caviar. Super fritter!
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2006 Salon Champagne Blanc de Blancs Brut. VM 97. The 2006 Salon is a very rich wine, almost uncharacteristically so. Deep and exotic the 2006 exudes richness in all of its dimensions, with myriad inflections of sumptuous fruit that fill out its ample, large-scaled frame. Today, the 2006 is surprisingly accessible for a young Salon, but it needs time to shed some baby fat. At times, the 2006 recalls the 2002, but it appears to have more phenolic intensity and overall structure. Even with all of its flamboyance and pure volume, the 2006 retains quite a bit of energy and freshness. I imagine it will be a fascinating, utterly compelling Champagne to follow over the next several decades. (Drink between 2026-2046)
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2007 Salon Champagne Blanc de Blancs Brut. VM 96. The 2007 Salon is gorgeous. Weightless, delicate and understated, the 2007 is all class. Today, the 2007 reminds me of the 2004 in its bright, citrus and floral-infused profile, but with a bit more creaminess, mid-palate depth and softer contours, all of which will make the 2007 easy to drink with minimal cellaring. Next to the 2006, the 2007 is quite a bit fresher and more delineated, with none of exuberance, power of tropically-leaning overtones found in its younger sibling. At this stage, the 2007 is a bit inward and closed in on itself. Then again, it is Salon. This is another terrific showing from Salon and the team headed by President Didier Depond. Dosage is 5 grams per liter. (Drink between 2020-2047)
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2012 Salon Champagne Blanc de Blancs Brut. VM 97. The 2012 Salon is absolutely gorgeous. It offers a beguiling mix of radiance and energy that seems to capture a little bit of elements of some of its older siblings. The expression of fruit is radiant and quite overt, but without reaching the tropical exuberance of the 2006. In shape, the 2012 recalls the mid-weight style of 2007 with the freshness of 2008, but not quite the youthful austerity of that wine. If that sounds like an appealing combination, well it is. The 2012 Salon is all harmony and class. (Drink between 2022-2043)
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Ready for nigiri.
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And so is the chef.
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Baby sea bream. Cured in salt and pickled in vinegar.
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Cured Sardines from Japan (Ishikawa prefecture). One of our favorites — gotta love that vinegar.
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Goldeneye snapper. Charred with Binchō-tan charcoal. Lots of char flavor and a firmer, drier, texture than some fish.
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Shima-aji (Striped Jack Mackerel), Ponzu jelly, chive, and shiso flower. Scrumptious.
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Fan clam with shiso. Slightly heavy.
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Another view.
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2012 Louis Jadot Montrachet. BH 91-94. Mild sulfur detracts only faintly from the ultra-elegant white flower, pear, citrus, spice and wet stone nuances. There is outstanding volume and concentration to the attractively well-detailed and imposingly-scaled flavors that display borderline painful intensity on the driving and linear if very compact finish. Even by the usual outsized standards of Montrachet this is a big though not massive example. (Drink starting 2022)
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Monkfish liver from the East Coast, Crème brûlée style. Sweet and tangy sauce. Very interesting prep.
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Clam miso. Lovely and balanced.
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Hokkaido Hairy crab with crab guts (kani miso). Great crabby bite.
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Spanish O-Toro (fatty tuna belly), dry-aged 1 week. I could have eaten 10 of these!
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Sea perch nigiri.
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The sardine returns for an encore.
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And Jeffrey brought a red, because while he agreed to go to a Salon dinner, he doesn’t really like champagne :-P.
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Jeffrey was obsessed prior to the dinner with ordering the “hot courses” (which aren’t on the normal omakase). So we ordered them off the menu after the main progression. Obsessed. You’d think he doesn’t like “actual sushi.”
Miso Seabass wraps. Butter lettuce, miso marinated seabags, crispy sweet potato. Plebeian, but very pleasant. The crispy potato offered a very nice textural crunch.
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Crispy Lobster Tempura. Icimi aioli sauce. Pretty. I didn’t try because of the carbs.
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Deep Fried Fresh Soft Shell Crab. Pickled cucumber, creamy citrus soy, chive. I did have to try this as the fry was “lighter”. really quite lovely with a nice crunchy from the “soft” shell and good citrus notes pairing well with the sweetness of the crab.
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Yamaimo Fries. Japanese mountain potato, truffle salt.
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Tamago.
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Green Tea Cheesecake. I had a little taste as it is (mostly) fat — albeit with quite a bit of sugar.
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Roasted Green Tea finished the evening nicely.

Overall, another perfect night of sushi and champagne!

Instantly Brother’s Santa Monica has leapt into the top tier of westside sushi bars along with Miyagi and Shunji. It’s combination of perfect nigri and very refined “other dishes” are really great. It’s slightly different from woodland hills in personality, with some dishes in common and some specific to each — just enough to keep things interesting.

For more Sushi dining reviews click here.

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Related posts:

  1. Brothers Sushi Two
  2. Food as Art – The Brothers Sushi
  3. Artsy Toppings – Sushi of Gari
  4. Sushi Miyagi Apres
  5. Soko Sushi
By: agavin
Comments (0)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Brothers Sushi, Champagne, Foodie Club, Mark Okuda, Moriyuki Kanamaru, Salon, Santa Monica, Sushi

Totally Takeda

Jul14

Restaurant: Takeda Sushi

Location: 123 Astronaut Ellison S Onizuka St #307, Los Angeles, CA 90012. (213) 613-0083

Date: December 2, 2022

Cuisine: Japanese Sushi

Rating: Could be the best sushi I’ve had in LA

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For penultimate sushi blowout of the year we decided to head downtown and tryout the relatively new Sushi Takeda, which are the new digs for our old friend Chef Hide Takeda who sliced up some awesome fish at Tsujita Sushi for years. He’s recently earned a Michelin star here at Takeda too.
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It’s located on top of one of those very little Tokyo (and also SGV) vertical maxi-malls.
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Classic frontage.
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The gang at the bar. There are two nightly seatings for omakase.
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Jeffrey, of course, was pushing for his one favorite white burgundy love: Coche.

From my cellar: 1993 Coche-Dury Meursault Les Rougeots. BH 90. A slightly reductive and fully mature nose features hints of exotic fruit and subtle earth notes that can also be found on the generous yet detailed medium weight plus flavors that are both delicious and impressively complex on the sappy and mouth coating finish. Lovely and drinking perfectly now. Consistent notes.

This was another of those bottles that Fred “didn’t trust” (because of their color) but which turned out to be absolutely amazing!
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1996 Coche-Dury Meursault 1er Cru Caillerets. BH 91. Exquisite nose of hazelnut and ripe melon with flavors that are not particularly dense but very fine, tight and beautifully detailed with plenty of minerality and outstanding acid/fruit balance. Even though this is young vine fruit, it shows excellent intensity on the long finish.
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2006 Coche-Dury Meursault Les Rougeots. VM 91. The 2006 Meursault Les Rougeots has a thrilling bouquet with a ton of reduction, yet somehow there is marvellous delineation and penetration. The palate is powerful, spicy and dense with a waxy mouthfeel and impressive density. It feels tangy in the mouth and yet it does not convey the same detail as the 1999 tasted alongside, on the finish. Still, this is a fine Meursault considering the vintage. Tasted at La Paulée in Beaune. (Drink between 2019-2030)

These professional scores are always way too low for these wines.
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Giant octopus from Hokkaido with Abalone and bonito dashi soup. On the side was a small container of special sour plum sake for dipping the octopus into. A lovely subtle soup with smokey dashi notes.
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Steamed female snow crab from Hokkaido. Two kinds of egg, the outer and inner eggs plus meat. Other non yuzu citrus to squeeze on top plus shiso flowers. Really fabulous bit of shellfish.

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Ginger, of course.
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Marinated bluefin tuna. Amazing and soft and a cloud.
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Young red snapper. Salty notes.
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Pike mackerel from Hokkaido topped with ginger scallion seaweed. This has a very short season and was insanely good.
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Toro takuan nigiri. The radish had a sweet mirin flavor. Overall an incredible bite.
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King mackerel with salt. Smoked like a deli fish.
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Intermezzo. Seaweed with mountain yam in vinegar. Really great.
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The shape…
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Hawaii abalone with abalone liver sauce. Cleanest version of this I’ve had.
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Shima-aji. Yellowtail amberjack. Tea like finish.
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2004 Domaine Leflaive Chevalier-Montrachet. BH 95. This is almost as backward as the Bienvenues though supremely elegant white flower and subtle spice aromas peek through the moderate reduction yet the piercingly mineral flavors display a beguiling sweetness on the crystalline and incredibly precise finish that seems to have no end. This will be a great wine in time as it’s clear that there is another dimension here compared to all of the previous wines. (Drink starting 2015)
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2010 Domaine Leflaive Chevalier-Montrachet. VM 97+. Bright pale yellow. Very pure, chalky aromas of lemon, lime, white flowers and iodine. Boasts outstanding tension and building intensity to its powerful lemon peel, pineapple and crushed stone flavors. Rare precision and inner-mouth perfume here. Saturates every square millimeter of the palate yet finishes with an impression of weightlessness. A wine of great finesse, this should go on for two decades or more. “The Batard is for the body while this is for the spirit,” notes winemaker Eric Remy. One of my favorite wines of the vintage.
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Ika squid with salty fermented snapper tripe on top. Best squid I’ve probably had.
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My 10th ginger.
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Golden eye snapper.
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2012 Louis Jadot Montrachet. BH 91-94. Mild sulfur detracts only faintly from the ultra-elegant white flower, pear, citrus, spice and wet stone nuances. There is outstanding volume and concentration to the attractively well-detailed and imposingly-scaled flavors that display borderline painful intensity on the driving and linear if very compact finish. Even by the usual outsized standards of Montrachet this is a big though not massive example. (Drink starting 2022)

This was actually drinking like a 99 point WB right now!
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Saber fish, deep fried with shiso. Popcorn like fry.
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Goldeneye snapper cheek. Awesome sweet broth.
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Otoro. Sublime.
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Sardine roll.
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Surf clam from Hokaido.
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Chawanmushi (Japanese savory egg custard) with surf clam skirt and monkfish liver. Super rich and unctuous.
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Sea bream Salt and yuzu.
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Santa Barbara spot prawn cured with kelp. Cured for 4-6 hours. Really incredible.
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Sea perch. Super savory Tiny bit smoked.
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Shrimp miso soup.
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Uni, wasabi, and ikura (salmon roe). Classic combo that was scrumptuous.
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Toro Sardine. A bit of shiso. Awesome.
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Scallop smashed habdroll. No rice.
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Jeffrey’s negi tori handroll Nori from Kyushu.
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Barracuda. Wonderful char.
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Santa barbara uni. Spectacular.
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Braided Kohada.
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Tamago. Very sweet and nice.
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Erick’s repeat sardine.
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Sweet effervescent Yuzu juice. He used to do this at Tsujita too.
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OMG!
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This was one incredible lineup of sushi and wine. Wow!

This was totally my style of omakase. It was mostly nigri, with each piece being both distinct and and memorable, almost sublime. The subtle curing, the deft but restrained use of “toppings”, and the assertive rice are all out of this world. It’s expensive. It’s a bit high maintenance. It’s for purists. But it is incredible!

For more LA dining reviews click here.

For more LA Chinese dining reviews click here.

Related posts:

  1. Totally Totoraku
  2. Totally Toscana
  3. Kaneyoshi Take 2
  4. Shunji Sushi – Nonstop Nigiri
  5. Katana – Stripping it all Down
By: agavin
Comments (0)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: coche, DTLA, Foodie Club, Hide Takeda, Japanese cuisine, Little Tokyo, Michelin 1 Star, Sushi

Robo Eats – Okumura

May22

Restaurant: Okumura Restaurant

Location: 17302 Ventura Blvd, Encino, CA 91316. (818) 986-9712

Date: October 3, 2022

Cuisine: Japanese Sushi

Rating: Fine

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Here I was just trying to find a reasonably priced but solid Sushi spot during one of my valley dinner “waits” (while my son was in robotics).
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Nice enough interior.
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Salad.
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Albacore with crispy onions and ponzu.
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Halibut and sweetened soy.
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Hamachi Jalepeno.
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Salmon and Hamachi sashimi.
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Scallop and Mackerel Sashimi.
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Toro, uni, and eel sushi.

Okumura was solid. They didn’t have much in the way of exotics on the menu, but what I had was good. It’s a dependable neighborhood sushi joint.

For more LA dining reviews click here.

Related posts:

  1. Robo Eats – Khaosan
  2. Robo Eats – Anarbagh
  3. Robo Eats – Lucille’s
  4. Robo Eats – Szechuan Place
  5. Robo Eats – Agra Tandoori
By: agavin
Comments (0)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Okumura, RoboEats, SFV, Sushi

OOToro Double

Mar21

Restaurant: OOToro [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]

Location: 1569 Fairway Dr, Walnut, CA 91789. (909) 598-8299

Date: August 13, 2022

Cuisine: Japanese Sushi (with slight nod to China)

Rating: Ends of the earth, but very good

_

Chef Kaz of Totoraku, an occasional hedonist, sent us far east to this Sushi restaurant in 2016 and it was such a fun time that we had to return again for a sixth visit — it’s now become a twice a year thing. This is my second return since the pandemic — although some in the group went once in the middle for a meal that was supposedly not quite up to snuff. Because a bunch of us have engaged in a special Sushi Series this fall (tasting all the best LA sushi places) I figured I’d include OOToro in the mix.

 And by far east I mean REALLY REALLY far east — to Walnut California. 40+ miles from my house. 20 miles past Alhambra (which most people consider to far to drive for food). It took an hour and twenty minutes on a Saturday night!

The slick looking location is in the heart of the affluent Chinese American San Gabriel Valley. But yes, it’s Japan, if perhaps catering to Chinese taste. This photo was shot at about 10pm after everyone else had left.

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Here is the private room — the only way to go.

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Edamame.
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Mango, Avocado, Hairy crab, Some kind of Jelly (ponzu?). This was a new dish, and quite refreshing. Many in the party loved it. I thought the mango and crab bit was a touch too sweet, but was pretty good.
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On the right Octopus with Caviar and Yuzu. On the left Scallop with Uni. The yuzu part was great. This was a lovely dish, although they don’t use the best quality caviar here and there is an overreliance on uni.
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White fish tempura. The name sounded like “pea soup.” The tempura was dusted with wasabi salt which is traditional. Nice, but slightly dull tempura.
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Abalone, jellyfish, shrimp tempura (wrapped in potato), sea snail and “katsuloco” (the yellow sponge). The abalone was great for that creature. The jellyfish was a bit bland. The shrimp great, the snail nice, and the sponge a fishy spongey texture I really enjoyed.
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Sashimi of toro, ikura, uni, and a white fish. A bit of rice was hidden underneath. This was a lovely (and rich) dish.
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Oysters 3 ways: with black tobiko, ikura, and uni.
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Wagyu toast with caviar and balsamic. This used a “truffle oil caviar” that was kind of gross. Otherwise it would have been a nice dish but the truffle oil only detracted.
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The stain!
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Kumadai and another snapper with yuzu and wasabi. Lovely bright fish.
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Kama-toro. The ultra rich tuna collar. Always an awesome bite.
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Seared Ruby Snapper. Very sauced and lovely.
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Crab, Red Snapper, Truffle Oil Caviar and Yuzu miso sauce. The dish was nice except for that truffle oil in the caviar which was a minor negative. It basically should never be used.
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Kimchi uni noodles. Great. Kinda spicy.
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Ron’s “non spicy” creamy version.
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A5 Wagyu. Simple but delicious.
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Clam miso. Lovely.
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Green Tea Cheesecake. Very straightforward, basically just cheesecake with matcha powder in it.
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I jazzed ours up with my own private stock of Valrhona 70% and house-made Hazelnut Brittle.
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The room.
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This group of “kids” (20s) were celebrating a birthday and we toasted them with some extra Krug.
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Wines for tonight:
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Overall, OOToro — while always good — showed again that the private room is really the way to go. This was a great meal and much more subtle and sophisticated than some of the front room fare. Really great stuff — although we should have gotten the largest omakase for max variety. Tonight I felt was the weakest OOToro in a while — although it was still very good — but somehow there were a few dishes that I didn’t love. Maybe it was the truffle caviar. Maybe it was the fact that I had a massive Longo Dim Sum Lunch only a few hours before.

For more LA dining reviews click here,

or more crazy Hedonist dinners here!

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Also, after dinner, instead of the surprisingly fun Courtyard Marriott view parking lot, we ended up at this terrible picnic table at some even cheaper dive hotel Ron was staying at. Kinda dingy and depressing. Never again.

Related posts:

  1. Why Walnut? — OOToro
  2. OOToro Holiday
  3. OOToro Five O
  4. Cheeks & Things – OOToro
  5. O OOToro
By: agavin
Comments (1)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Champagne, hedonists, Japanese cuisine, Omakase, ootoro, SGV, Sushi, Wine

Coche In at Brothers Santa Monica

Feb23

Restaurant: The Brothers Sushi Santa Monica

Location: 1008 Montana Ave #1, Santa Monica, CA 90403. (424) 330-0270

Date: July 28, 2022

Cuisine: Modern Sushi

Rating: Awesome (and close)!

_

Our Foodie Gang has been going to the incredible “The Brothers Sushi” in the valley for some time now, and it was with much glee that we welcomed in the brand new (and somewhat delayed) Montana Santa Monica location.
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The space used to be the repulsive Louise’s Trattoria, serving not exactly Italian for decades. But Brother’s has given it a major new makeover.
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This particular visit was during their soft opening and Chef Mark Okuda was there to personally handle our omakase.
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The build out is gorgeous. Here the bar is for omakase only and the tables are for à la carte only.
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More details.
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Chef Mark Okuda on the left and his chef de cuisine Moriyuki Kanamaru.
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2014 Pierre-Yves Colin-Morey Saint-Aubin 1er Cru En Remilly Cuvée Nicholas et Mathis. 93 points. Flinty nose, but not very giving. Lemon infused palate, crisp and acidic with lemon rind elements and a chalky texture. Much more closed than the very open 2013.

What better way to inaugurate a new sushi bar than with coche night!
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2008 Coche-Dury Meursault. VM 91. Peach and white flowers on the nose; a real essence of Meursault perfume. Then creamy-rich and sweet, with soft citrus flavors dominating. Finishes with lovely lingering sweetness of fruit. Ridiculously sexy village wine.
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2011 Domaine & Selection Meursault Coche-Dury. 92 points.
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2012 Coche-Dury Meursault. 94 points. Sexy aromas of orange oil and brown spices. Bright and penetrating, with peach and soft citrus flavors firmed on the tactile back end by saline minerality. Really excellent texture and length for village wine. (Incidentally, don’t hesitate to snap up Coche’s 2012 Bourgogne Blanc if you can find it. This ripe, fruit-driven wine, from rocky soil around Coche’s house, is as good as most Meursault village wines. The very rich, tactile, classic Meursault Narvaux, which is usually sent to the U.S., was just at the beginning of its malo, and the Rougeot hadn’t even started at the end of May.)
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2013 Coche-Dury Meursault. 93 points. Pale, bright yellow. Stone fruits and a honeyed nuance on the inviting nose. Concentrated, ripe and dry, conveying a musky complexity to the flavors of peach, pear and minerals. Finishes with excellent energy and a positive phenolic edge. (Burgundy lovers who routinely snap up the Coche-Dury Bourgogne Blanc when they’re lucky enough to spot it in a retail shop or on a restaurant wine list will love the very sexy 2013 version, which offers intense white peach and lime flavors framed by lemony acidity and finishes with noteworthy refinement for its humble appellation.) (Drink between 2017-2023)
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2016 Coche-Dury Meursault. 93 points. A cooler and more restrained nose features notes of spicy green apple, acacia blossom and the hallmark hazelnut wisps. There is excellent density to the finer and more mineral-inflected flavors that possess almost painful intensity on the focused, powerful and strikingly persistent finish. This too is a seriously good performance for a villages level wine that should age effortlessly for at least a decade. (Drink starting 2026)
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Marinated Seaweed, Scallop, and Okra. Sunomono sweet and tangy quality with beautiful textures.
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2 week aged King Salmon, Marinated Momotaro Tomato, Ponzu Jelly, and Ice Plant. Delicious.
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Smoke infused dry aged medium Chu Toro with wasabi. The smokey flavor is lovely.
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Chawanmushi with Dungeness Crab and Santa Barbara Uni. A very lovely sweet and briny custard.
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Maryland softshell Blue Crab, lightly fried and marinated with pickles. The acidity served as a nice offset to the grease of the fry.
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Spring snapper.
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5 day dry aged Amberjack.
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Shima Aji from Kushu Japan.
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Golden eye snapper. Had a touch of char as he blow torches some charcoal over it.
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Marinated Maguro (blue eye toro).

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Sweet Ebi from Japan.
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Special brined Ikura over rice and topped with wasabi.
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Sea Perch.
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O Toro. Some of the softest, fatiest otoro I have yet had.
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Anago Sea Eel from Kushu. Lovely soft texture.
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Another round of chu and o toro
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Clam miso. Lovely briny flavor. Very satisifying.
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Tamago.
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Hokkaido uni “wrap”.
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A5 Wagyu nigiri.
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Hokkaido scallop.
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Toro Takuan Handroll.
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Hamachi.
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Ikura.
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Ngawa. Haven’t heard of this fish but it was super tender and delicious, almost unctuous.
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Seared Chu Toro “Zule” with homemade soy sauce.
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Matcha Cheesecake.
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Leche Quemada Gelato — “burnt” some milk with Cinnamon and Vanilla and then cooked into the mix a light Water Caramel. I didn’t have any Animal Crackers so I decorated with Stroopwafel — made by me for @sweetmilkgelato –#SweetMilkGelato #gelato #dessert #icecream #FrozenDessert #nomnom #dessertlovers #dessertporn #icecreamlovers #gelatoitaliano #foodporn #gelatolover #food #foodgasm #foodblogger #dessertgasm #desserttime #foodphotography #gelatoartigianale #gelatomania #dessertlover #icecream #icecreamlovers #cookie #cinnamon #vanilla #BurntMilk #stroopwafel #caramel
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Chef enjoying some gelato.
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Bonus!

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Overall, another perfect night of sushi and white burgundy!

Instantly Brother’s Santa Monica has leapt into the top tier of westside sushi bars along with Miyagi and Shunji. It’s combination of perfect nigri and very refined “other dishes” are really great. It’s slightly different from woodland hills in personality, with some dishes in common and some specific to each — just enough to keep things interesting.

For more Italian dining reviews click here.

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Related posts:

  1. Brothers Sushi Two
  2. Food as Art – The Brothers Sushi
  3. Major Coche to the Dome-O
  4. Fraiche Santa Monica
  5. Fraiche Santa Monica part deux
By: agavin
Comments (2)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Brothers Sushi, BYOG, Foodie Club, Gelato, Mark Okuda, Moriyuki Kanamaru, Omakase, Sushi, Wine

Summer Miyagi

Dec21

Restaurant: Sushi Miyagi [ 1, 2, 3 ]

Location: 150 S Barrington Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90049. (323) 382-5635

Date: June 2022

Cuisine: Japanese Sushi

Rating: Top Shelf Omakase Sushi

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Great sushi is always a good excuse to pull out the beloved Champagnes and White Burgundies.
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The unassuming storefront on the largely ignored side street that is S Barrington Ave.
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The space is small but attractive (these are pre covid pics).
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This is chef focused serious sushi, and so we pre-ordered the largest omakase possible — Erick even egged them on to a larger than offered menu. This picture is also pre-covid, post there is a plexiglass barrier across the bar and no bar seating.

Chef Shinichi Miyagi says about himself on his website:

Born in Osaka, the art of sushi mesmerized the chef at an early age and decided to devote his life as a “Decchi” (apprentice) under Master Higuchi at the age of 16. He opened his first “Kappo” (traditional style of cooking in front of a crowd) restaurant at the age of 25, and moved to LA at 29, working in numerous well known Sushi restaurants in West LA, Beverly Hills, and San Diego.

Through managing a Sushi restaurant in Manhattan Beach (i-naba), now in present day, he found an opportunity to try his skills as an executive chef in Brentwood/Los Angeles. The chefs many years of experience in choosing the freshest fish, will surprise even the most sophisticated pallets of this beautiful city.

His methods and techniques in preparation follows the traditional Japanese style, bringing out the true flavors of the fish. The chef also prepares two styles of rice, AKAZU SHARI (Red vinegar sushi rice), and SHIROZU SHARI (White vinegar rice). The SHARI (Sushi rice) will alternate depending on the fish being prepared, and we hope you enjoy the eclectic flavors of the different vinegars being used.

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2008 Taittinger Champagne Comtes de Champagne Blanc de Blancs Brut. VM 98+. Taittinger’s 2008 Blanc de Blancs Comtes de Champagne is simply breathtaking. I have tasted it many times over the years in various trial disgorgements and it has never been anything less than compelling. The final, finished wine captures all of that potential. Bright, focused and wonderfully deep, Comtes is a fabulous example of a vintage that expresses so much energy but with real fruit intensity, the signatures that distinguish it from other vintages (1996 comes to mind) that were similarly taut, but more austere in the early going. Although the 2008 impresses right out of the gate, it only really starts to open up with several hours of air. The 2008 Comtes represents the purest essence of the Côtes des Blancs in a great, historic vintage. Readers who can find the 2008 should not hesitate, as it is a truly brilliant epic Champagne that no one who loves the very best in Champagne will want to be without. (Drink between 2023-2048)
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Amuses. Oyster with caviar. Monkfish Liver with ponzu jelly. Deep fried River Crab. Steamed Conch in the back. The monkfish liver was particularly good for its type, super tender and not a hint of bitterness.
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Sashimi. Japanese Bonito with ginger on top. Japanese Halibut. Toro from Spain.
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Japanese hairy crab. Both some meat and a bit of leg. Very sweet and tender.
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Octopus egg in soy sauce with wasabi. I’m not sure I’ve ever had this. It was a texture a bit like a chewy rice, quite delicious.
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2007 Pierre-Yves Colin-Morey Chassagne-Montrachet 1er Cru Les Chenevottes. VM 91+. Deep aromas of pear, white flowers and clove. Sweet and lush but with ripe harmonious acidity keeping the flavors under wraps today. Best now on the long, vibrant finish, which offers a lovely combination of ripeness and energy. But distinctly firm-edged at present. Colin told me he thought that pHs levels in his 2007s were in the range of 3.2 but noted that he doesn’t pay attention to technical parameters as much as to the taste of the wine.
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Japanese red snapper.
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Hokkaido Scallop.
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Triggerfish with fresh liver from the same fish. Never had this particular variant. Lovely.
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Striped Jack from Japan.
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Oregon Giant Clam.
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Amberjack that was 10 days aged topped with Yuzu koshu.
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Japanese Sweet Shrimp.
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Norwegian Salmon.
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2007 Domaine des Comtes Lafon Meursault 1er Cru Charmes. BH 94. This is more expressive and a bit riper with ultra pure aromas of peach, apricot, pear and spiced white peach leading to ripe, concentrated and superbly precise flavors that display plenty of mid-palate fat and ample minerality that this part of Charmes always seems to impart to the wines and overall, this is a stunningly harmonious wine of finesse. (Drink starting 2017)
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Bluefin Tuna that was 19 day aged.
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Almost O-toro.
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Spanish Mackerel from Japan.
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Japanese Baby Barracuda.
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Black throat from Nigata prefecture.
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Goldeneye Snapper with Summer Truffle.
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Hokkaido Uni.
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Japanese Beef nigiri.
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2007 Vincent Dauvissat (René & Vincent) Chablis Grand Cru Les Clos. VM 96+. Bright yellow. Subtly complex nose melds Asian pear, violet, lavender, ginger, iodine and powdered stone. Tactile and dense on entry, then creamy in the middle, conveying an impression of great volume without weight. This extremely backward, youthfully understated Clos firms up dramatically on the back end, finishing with palate-saturating citrus and talc flavors that refuse to fade. One of the longest Chablis bottlings I tasted for this issue, this truly transcends chardonnay.
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Chawanmushi with Uni, Mushroom, and Tofu. Very soft.
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Crab Hand-roll.
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Anago Eel.
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Kohada.
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2005 Taittinger Champagne Comtes de Champagne Blanc de Blancs Brut. VM 93. Taittinger’s 2005 Comtes de Champagne was a perfect way to commence proceedings. Orchard fruit and hints of brioche on the seductive nose are joined by a hint of lemon verbena filtering through with time. The palate is beautifully balanced, perhaps not as riveting as a recently tasted 2008, yet underpinned by a fine bead of acidity and exuding harmony on the apricot-tinged finish. This is drinking perfectly now but should give 15-20 years of drinking pleasure. (Drink between 2022-2042)
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Vanilla and Truffle ice cream. Not actually that big a fan of truffle in my ice cream.
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Cherry Gelato – a blend of Morello Cherry and intense Amarena Cherry fruit make this dairy gelato really pop — topped with Candied Amarena Cherries — made by me for @sweetmilkgelato — #SweetMilkGelato #gelato #dessert #icecream #FrozenDessert #nomnom #dessertlovers #dessertporn #icecreamlovers #gelatoitaliano #foodporn #gelatolover #food #foodgasm #foodblogger #dessertgasm #desserttime #foodphotography #gelatoartigianale #gelatomania #dessertlover #icecream #icecreamlovers #amarena #morello #cherry
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Matcha Almond Latte Gelato – Ceremonial Matcha Green Tea and Sicilian Noto Romano Almond gelato base — made by me for @sweetmilkgelato –#dessert #icecream #FrozenDessert #nomnom #dessertlovers #dessertporn #icecreamlovers #gelatoitaliano #foodporn #gelatolover #food #foodgasm #foodblogger #dessertgasm #desserttime #foodphotography #gelatoartigianale #gelatomania #dessertlover #icecream #icecreamlovers #almond #matcha #GreenTea #Sicily
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Sushi Miyagi is exactly the kind of sushi place I like best — all omakase and very traditional. This is some seriously good fish. Mostly just straight nigiri and a bit of spectacular sashimi and a handful of cooked dishes. This is really really good and instantly catapulted into the top westside sushi joints. Very friendly too. Intimate as well. Sushi at this level is all about the chef and Shinichi Miyagi is very talented.

Not for the sushi neophytes and roll loves, but fabulous for those of us who really enjoy great fish being showcased in a straightforward and delicious manner.

For more LA dining reviews click here.

Related posts:

  1. Mr. Miyagi’s Sushi Bar
  2. Sushi Miyagi Apres
  3. Yamakase Summer
  4. Brothers Sushi Two
  5. Summer at 71Above
By: agavin
Comments (3)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: BYOG, Champage, Gelato, Japanese cuisine, Miyagi, Sashimi, Sushi, White Burgundy, Wine

Asanebo Evening

Sep28

Restaurant: Asanebo [1, 2]

Location: 11941 Ventura Blvd, Studio City, CA 91604. (818) 760-3348

Date: January 27, 2022

Cuisine: Japanese

Rating: Very good creative Japanese

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Asanebo has been a high end valley classic spot for a long time, so long that the last time I was here was before I started taking pictures of all my food (which was 2010).

Chef Tetsuya Nakao came to America in 1982. Him and his younger brother, Shunji, were the original chefs that helped start Matsuhisa in Beverly Hills. After establishing the restaurant as one of the best in Los Angeles, the Nakao brothers ventured out to start their own place. “Asanebo” opened in September 26, 1991. Over the years, “Asanebo” was recognized as one of the top Japanese restaurants from Zagat, LA Times, LA Weekly, and more.

“Asanebo” also accomplished one Michelin Stars in 2008 and the other in 2009. It is part of chef Tetsuya’s standards to provide the best quality fish, meat, vegetables, and other ingredients possible to his customers. Not only is the food so great, but it is his warm character that brings in new customers from all over the world.

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Because of the pandemic they have this nice outside tend/patio in the parking lot.
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The menu is big with a mix of traditional and that style of late 1990s and 00s LA Japanese that is heavily Matsuhisa influenced but not focused on the style over substance greatest hits (Katana and Sushi Roku I’m looking at you). It’s much closer in both period and style to Takao.

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2000 Charles Heidsieck Champagne Brut Millésimé. JG 94. The 2000 Charles Heidsieck Brut Millésime is comprised of a blend of sixty percent pinot noir and forty percent chardonnay and spent more than ten years on the lees in the les Crayères cellars here prior to disgorgement and release. I had the good fortune to taste this beautiful vintage twice in preparation for this report, and it continues to deepen and add more complexity with the passing of time. The deep and very refined nose offers up a classy mélange of apple, pain grillé, peach, a marvelously complex signature of salty soil tones, orange zest and a dollop of summer truffle in the upper register. On the palate the wine is deep, full-bodied, pure and shows off lovely tertiary layers of complexity, with a rock solid core, great focus and breed, refined mousse and a very long, pure and perfectly balanced finish. Stellar juice. (Drink between 2014-2030)
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2004 Louis Roederer Champagne Cristal Brut. VM 97. The 2004 Cristal is superb today. Bright and focused, the 2004 shows all of the tension and energy that has always been one of its signatures. The first hints of aromatic maturity are starting to develop, but the 2004 remains quite young and full of energy. I have always admired the 2004 (along with the best wines of the vintage) for its focus. In this bottle, the interplay of freshness from the recent 2018 disgorgement and richness gained through added time on the lees (which also results in lower dosage of 7 grams per liter) opens another window into the personality of Cristal. In 2004, the Pinot Noir is 57%, or a bit lower than normal, while the Chardonnay at 43% is correspondingly a touch higher. (Drink between 2019-2039)
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2008 Claude Cazals Champagne Grand Cru Blanc de Blancs extra Brut Cuvée Vive.
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NV Jacques Selosse Champagne Exquise Sec. JG 94. I had never had the pleasure to taste this limited release bottling of Demi-Sec from Anselme Selosse, which he crafts with an eye to matching with dessert and which it paired beautifully with at the end of a vertical Domaine Dujac Clos de la Roche dinner that I will be reporting on in the next issue. Monsieur Selosse only makes a thousand bottles of Exquise, with this particular iteration disgorged in May of 2015 and finished off with a dosage of around twenty-four grams per liter. This is the same base wine as his Brut Initial cuvée, which hails from the lower sections of the slope of his top vineyards in Avize, Oger and Cramant, and simply finished off with a more generous dosage. The current release of Exquise is really lovely, offering up a complex nose of pear, patissière, chalky minerality, custard and a pungent topnote of spring flowers. On the palate the wine is deep, full-bodied, complex and beautifully balanced, with and excellent spine of acidity to carry the additional sweetness, fine focus, refined mousse and a very long, crisp and moderately sweet finish. Just a lovely wine. (Drink between 2016-2030)
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Chawanmushi. Santa Barbara uni. Wasabi. Ikura. Strong Dashi flavor. Lovely.
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Baby Spinach Salad. Seared scallop, fried potato. Quite nice and fresh.
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Seafood stick with homemade sweet salsa. Really great dish.
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Dave and Annie enjoy their sticks.
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2009 Henri Boillot Corton-Charlemagne. VM 96. High-pitched aromas of fresh peach, crushed stone, violet and lavender. Dense, sweet and rich, with very ripe pineapple fruit leavened by smoky minerality and given cut and focus by strong (4.5 g/l) acidity. Offers an uncanny combination of depth and high pitch for the vintage. The building, extremely long finish titillates the taste buds and leaves the mouth vibrating. Normally harvested on the late side, these vines were picked on September 5(!) in 2009, with potential alcohol of 12.9%.
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From my cellar: 2012 Domaine des Comtes Lafon Meursault Clos de la Baronne. PN 94 points. Showing very well, clean, mineral, straw basket, fine, articulated but not austere, nicely integrated, nice pear, apple, apple skin notes, long. In a great place right now and will hold 5-8 years.Asanebo w/Yarom and gang.
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Amberjack. Sesame miso. Pink salt. Serrano. The fish was lovely, but the sesame paste clashes a bit.
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Halibut. Italian Truffle. Sweet ponzu. Pickled cherry tomato. A bit too sweet and distracting.
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Japanese wild yellowtail. Hawaiian lava salt. Spicy ponzu.
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Grilled conch soup. Mushroom. Broth was great.
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2012 Colgin Syrah IX Estate. PN 92. Big, bold, tons of blackberry and blueberry and some meatiness; a good dose of fine expensive oak in there, really nice with the A5 wagyu with onion and a sweet soy sauce sauce; silky, big, bold, and eventually pretty oaky. Turned more oaky as the night went on. I imagine if they halved the oak on these monsters they would have something pretty special. Asanebo w/Yarom and gang. Not exactly Japanese food friendly.

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A5 wagyu with heirloom tomato. Very sweet classic Japanese flavor. Did pair nicely with the Colgin.
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Small flight of sushi. Blue Fin, Chu-Toro, Snapper and another white fish.
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Uni. Toro Takuan Roll (awesome) and crab hand roll.
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Freshwater eel.

Asanebo has been around since 1991 and as he was an early chef at Matsuhisa (along with his brother Shunji) the food very much reflects that. Like Takao (also at Matsuhisa) it’s positioned somewhere between a classic broad menu 1980s style sushi place and the more Peruvian influence Nobu style. But it’s definitely got strong California influences from the 1990s in a way I never saw in Japan during that period. While the style here is a bit 1990s (unlike Shunji who has massively “updated” recently) the execution remains excellent. I myself do slightly prefer either the very updated traditional or modern styles at the top end right now but there is no question that Asanebo is a great place and thoroughly enjoyable. It’s also not as expensive as the painfully bleeding edge places at current like Kaneyoshi.

For more LA dining reviews click here.

Related posts:

  1. An Evening at Malibu Wines
  2. Last Minute Shunji
  3. Why Walnut? — OOToro
  4. Food as Art – Shiki Sushi
By: agavin
Comments (1)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Asanebo, hedonists, Japanese cuisine, SFV, Sushi, Sushi Series

OOToro Holiday

Aug31

Restaurant: OOToro [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8]

Location: 1569 Fairway Dr, Walnut, CA 91789. (909) 598-8299

Date: December 11, 2021

Cuisine: Japanese Sushi (with slight nod to China)

Rating: Ends of the earth, but very good

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Chef Kaz of Totoraku, an occasional hedonist, sent us far east to this Sushi restaurant in 2016 and it was such a fun time that we had to return again for a sixth visit — it’s now become a twice a year thing. This is my second return since the pandemic — although some in the group went once in the middle for a meal that was supposedly not quite up to snuff. Because a bunch of us have engaged in a special Sushi Series this fall (tasting all the best LA sushi places) I figured I’d include OOToro in the mix.

 And by far east I mean REALLY REALLY far east — to Walnut California. 40+ miles from my house. 20 miles past Alhambra (which most people consider to far to drive for food). It took an hour and twenty minutes on a Saturday night!

The slick looking location is in the heart of the affluent Chinese American San Gabriel Valley. But yes, it’s Japan, if perhaps catering to Chinese taste. This photo was shot at about 10pm after everyone else had left.

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Here is the private room — the only way to go.

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NV Krug Champagne Brut Grande Cuvee Edition 169eme. VM 94. Krug”s NV Grande Cuvée 169ème Édition is brisk and finely cut, with terrific energy driving the citrus, floral and light tropical notes. Even with all of its energy, the 169 balances the vibrancy of the late-ripening 2013 vintage it is built on, with the depth that the reserve wines added to the blend. The 169 drinks well now but clearly has the potential to age. The 169 is a blend of 146 separate wines back to 2000. Krug ID: 120003. (Originally published in May 2021) (Drink between 2022-2042)
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2004 Vilmart & Cie Champagne Premier Cru Coeur de Cuvée. VM 95. The 2004 Coeur de Cuvée has gained considerable weight, richness and resonance over the last few years. Brioche, almonds, marzipan, anise and dried flowers are some of the notes that flesh out in a radiant, super-expressive Champagne built on texture and class. The 2004 is every bit as impressive as it has always been. At eleven years of age, the Coeur de Cuvée is just entering an early plateau of maturity that is likely to last for at least a handful of years. Disgorged May 2012. (Drink between 2015-2024)
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Edamame.
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Two oysters. Uni ikura. Radish ponzu.
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Abalone.
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Grilled Japanese blue fish with yam.
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2012 Vincent Dauvissat (René & Vincent) Chablis Grand Cru Les Preuses. VM 95+. Bright yellow. Aromas of elderflower, ginger, quinine and fern, plus a hint of petrol. Densely packed, dry and backward; hints at superb sucrosite on the vibrant middle palate, but the tight, chewy finish is dominated by menthol and wet stone. Not as expressive today as it was from barrel a year ago but built for a long and glorious evolution in bottle.
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2013 Vincent Dauvissat (René & Vincent) Chablis Grand Cru Les Preuses. VM 94. Vincent Dauvissat’s 2013 Chablis Les Preuses is one of my favorite Chablis of all, as I have a particular soft spot for the Les Preuses Grand Cru. Less massive than Les Clos or Valmur, Les Preuses usually offers the most chiseled, precise of all great Chablis drinking experiences, and in the hands of a master like Vincent Dauvissat the experience is most often unforgettable. In fact, the only problem with this Grand Cru is that there isn’t much of it made. (Drink between 2022-2032)
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2016 Vincent Dauvissat (René & Vincent) Chablis Grand Cru Les Preuses. JG 96+. The 2016 les Preuses chez Dauvissat is again, absolutely classical in profile, which means it is already delivering kaleidoscopic minerality in its vibrant nose of lemon, green apple, beeswax, layer upon layer of chalky minerality, spring flowers and a nice touch of orange zest in the upper register. On the palate the wine is pure, full and properly reserved in personality out of the blocks, with a great core, stunning mineral drive, great, snappy acids and a very, very long, focused and complex finish. A great, great Preuses in the making! (Drink between 2022-2060)
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2014 Vincent Dauvissat (René & Vincent) Chablis 1er Cru Vaillons. VM 93. Very pale yellow. Lemon oil, flowers and a lightly lactic yeasty nuance on the nose. Tight, upright and penetrating, with brisk lemony acidity intensifying the dense flavors of white peach and almond flower. Shows terrific grain and palate presence and finishes with explosive mounting length. A very serious Vaillons. Dauvissat noted that as these vines have aged, they are yielding consistently more mineral wines. (Drink between 2020-2030)

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A pair of lovely spoons.
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Nama Octopus (Taco) with Japanese uni.
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Lobster Salad with Truffle Caviar.
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Japanese Conch.
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Marc’s ass inn blanc.
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Shirako with ponzu (on request). The cod sperm sacks are so good!
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From my cellar: 2002 Domaine Jean Grivot Vosne-Romanée 1er Cru Les Beaux Monts. VM 92+. Deep red. Enticing aromas of minerals, flowers, red licorice and earth. Impressively glyceral on entry, then sweet and silky in the middle, with noteworthy energy and grip. Impressively concentrated and dense wine, with an explosive, rising finish and terrific cut. This should be at its peak between 2010 and 2017, says Grivot.
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Toro and o Toro sashimi. Special (sweet) soy sauce.
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Golden eye snapper.
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Yellowtail belly.
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Marc’s ass inn rouge.

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Kama toro. The special signature cut of tuna collar from the giant hunk of meat above.
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2011 Faiveley Chambolle-Musigny 1er Cru Les Amoureuses. 93 points.
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Seared ruby snapper.
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King crab.
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Pasta with crab and caviar.
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Second Kama Toro — because it had to be done.
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Grilled A5 Japanese Wagyu.
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Simon Bize Savigny-lès-Beaune 1er Cru Les Marconnets (forgot the year).
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Fish head miso.
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Chunks of fish in the soup (under the head).
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Toro steak.
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Because the cheapos in the group always want to order a smaller omakase, I feel obligated to treat the group to several plates of Ootoro’s awesome seafood tempura (including lobster).
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Oo-Toro ramen. Hadn’t tried this before. Was pretty awesome. Rich seafood miso broth.
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Cheesecake.
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Strawberries & Mascar-Creamy Gelato — A base infused with Mascarpone Cheese then blended with house-made Strawberry Curd — created by me for @sweetmilkgelato — my vain attempts to pipe a pretty decoration on top were uttery foiled by timing –#SweetMilkGelato #gelato #dessert #icecream #FrozenDessert #nomnom #dessertlovers #dessertporn #icecreamlovers #gelatoitaliano #foodporn #gelatolover #food #foodgasm #foodblogger #dessertgasm #desserttime #foodphotography #gelatoartigianale #gelatomania #dessertlover #icecream #icecreamlovers #cheesecake #mascarpone #cheese #strawberry #cream

Overall, OOToro — while always good — showed again that the private room is really the way to go. This was a great meal and much more subtle and sophisticated than some of the front room fare. Really great stuff — although we should have gotten the largest omakase for max variety, but even one down I was more than full (mostly because I ordered a couple extra tempura plates). The kitchen tonight was as good as ever despite the pandemic, however, we didn’t have a few of the more interesting items like the shabu shabu or roated/grilled tuna collar. Gotta get them to do the big one some time but I despair as there are too many without the guts (or stomachs) to go all out!

For more LA dining reviews click here,

or more crazy Hedonist dinners here!

Related posts:

  1. Post OOToro
  2. OOToro Five O
  3. O OOToro
  4. Why Walnut? — OOToro
  5. Collar the Market — OOToro
By: agavin
Comments (0)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: BYOG, Gelato, hedonists, ootoro, SGV, Sushi, Sushi Series, walnut california, Wine

Ginza Onodera Checkin

Aug27

Restaurant: Ginza Onodera [1, 2]

Location: 609 La Cienega Blvd, West Hollywood, CA 90069. (323) 433-4817

Date: December 7, 2021

Cuisine: Japanese Sushi

Rating: Fabulous nigiri, although expensive, not quite enough food, and minimal/no corkage

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It’s been 4 years since I visted Ginza Onodera, and while I thought it was one of the best high end sushi spots I’ve been to, collecting others willing to brace the price tag is always a little challenging. But “Sushi Series” (in which Foodie Club tries all the best sushi places in LA) warranted we revisit.

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Post pandemic they have put in the plastic divider. Not clear that this does anything at all, but I guess it makes people feel better.

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Cute little chop stick demon.
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On pulling out our wine we discovered that Ginza has recently disallowed corkage!  Eek gads. Hate that. We managed to beg them into allowing us to open 2 bottles if we bought 1 from the list, so we bought this.

NV Billecart-Salmon Champagne Brut Rosé. VM 92. Pale orange. High-pitched red berry, orange zest and jasmine aromas, with suave mineral and smoky lees notes adding complexity. Spicy and precise on the palate, showing very good punch to its strawberry and bitter cherry flavors. Opens up smoothly with air and picks up a bitter rhubarb quality that lingers onto the long, tightly focused finish. This bottling showed more brawny character than many past renditions of this <em>cuvée</em>, but with no lack of vivacity.
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2002 Louis Jadot Chevalier-Montrachet Les Demoiselles Domaine des Héritiers Louis Jadot. VM 96. Taut, vibrant aromas of grapefruit, apple, pear, and powdered and wet stone. A great expression of rocks in the mouth, with extremely pure flavors of grapefruit and lemon. Conveys a powerful impression of sweetness allied to sheer energy. Fabulous, consistent wine with near-perfect balance and extraordinary length. As penetrating as it is today, I would not describe this wine as austere.
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2004 Krug Champagne Vintage Brut. VM 97+. Krug’s 2004 Vintage is absolutely mesmerizing. Layers of bright, chiseled fruit open up effortlessly as the wine fleshes out with time in the glass. Persistent and beautifully focused, with a translucent sense of energy, the 2004 captures all the best qualities of the year. Moreover, the 2004 is clearly superior to the consistently underwhelming 2002 and the best Krug Vintage since 1996. Readers who can find it should not hesitate, as it is a magical bottle. (Drink between 2017-2044)
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Japanese halibut. Sake sauce.
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Octopus. Roasted green tea marinate.
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Chawanmushi. Uni. Caviar. Dashi.
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Barracuda. Seared.
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Bonito.
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Hairy crab with thick dashi.
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Monkfish Liver.
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Awesome pickled ginger.
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A few other pickles.
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Cruet (grouper).

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Japanese blue fin tuna.
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Saba.
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Japanese prawn.

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Ingredients at the ready.
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Japanese needle fish. Shiso. And shiso flower.
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Red miso.
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Baby White shrimp with uni.
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wild king yellow tail.
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Brined Hokaido uni.
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O Toro.
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Hok rockfish. Kinki.
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Tamago.
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Dark roasted green tea.
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coconut milk matcha panda cotta.

Overall Ginza Onodera has a very strong distinctive traditional style. The rich is basically oozing with red vinegar and has a strong assertive quality — but it does stay together well. The fish was very aged and marinated and each piece of nigiri crafted so as to balance with the particular qualities of the fish. I can’t fault the taste, texture, or presentation of nearly any of the dishes. They were pretty spectacular. And I love straight nigiri. Individually these are much more enjoyable than the odd combinations at Sushi of Gari for example.

And service was warm, very Japanese, and excellent.

My issues with Onodera are a high price point (about $400 for food) / quantity ratio. The price itself is high, but not outrageous at all given the labor involved (and certainly not offensive like Urwasawa). But are not ENOUGH pieces for my big nigiri appetite. I could easily have eaten 2-3 times as many. They might as well have just served me pairs. I would say that for pure nigiri QUALITY in volume this is the best I’ve had outside of Japan. Still, if you want to experience the exquisite art of perfectly crafted nigiri — Onodera is one of several top sushi places right now in LA.

But we were so hungry we went afterward to Tu Madre Tacos for infamous second dinner (see below).

For more LA dining reviews click here.

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The site of our second dinner.
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The menu. Erick and I put away all of the following tacos AFTER Ginza. Yep.
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Related posts:

  1. Newest Oldest Sushi
  2. Go Go Gozen
  3. Artsy Toppings – Sushi of Gari
  4. Kaneyoshi Take 1
  5. Shunji Second Stage
By: agavin
Comments (0)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Foodie Club, Ginza Onodera, Sashimi, Second Dinner, Sushi, Sushi Series, Wine

Kaneyoshi Take 2

Aug14

Restaurant: Sushi Kaneyoshi [1, 2]

Location: 250 1st St B1, Los Angeles, CA 90012. (213) 277-2388

Date: November 30, 2021

Cuisine: Omakase Sushi

Rating: Lean mean and awesome

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Our Foodie Club “Sushi Series” continues with not one but two visits to LA Omakase newcomer Kaneyoshi. This dinner was sort of a half “Foodie Club” and half Sage Society dinner (in my mind). Mostly it’s just my serious sushi friends which happen to overlap into those two realms. This is the second dinner, and the people are pretty similar.

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Kaneyoshi is tucked away in the basement of a Little Tokyo mall/garage building. It’s fairly hard to find. The first time we located the sign but it took us 15 minutes of hunting around to actually find the restaurant (you go up a sketchy stairs, enter a lobby, ask the bored guard, take an elevator down to…
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This glamorous “service corridor” — they don’t let anyone in early.

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Inside, however, it’s very attractive. It’s just a single 10-12 person seat sushi bar L and a some space around it.
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The chefs prepping away.

This time Liz “upped the ante” with regard to the slate of wine — as if it wasn’t impressive before :-)!
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2000 Krug Champagne Clos du Mesnil. BH 98. I have had the opportunity to try this vintage 3 times since it was released but this is the first time in large format (see the database for the reviews from 750 ml). As is often the case in magnum there is just another level of depth and freshness as the expressive, cool and restrained nose displays only a trace of secondary character to the yeasty aromas of brioche, white orchard fruit and citrus peel nuances. There is a gorgeously clean and highly sophisticated mouth feel to the middle weight flavors that are supported by an ultra-fine if notably firm mousse, all wrapped in a markedly dry but not really austere finish that possesses excellent lift that contributes to that beguiling feeling of being impatient for the next sip. Unlike this wine from 750 ml, in magnum format this is nowhere near ready and this knockout will require plenty of patience, indeed it wouldn’t surprise me if my 2025+ suggested drinking window proves to be overly optimistic. In sum, this is a wine of such harmony and balance that it really sticks in your memory as having provided one of those rare ‘wow’ experiences! (Drink starting 2025)

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Not totally sure which Selosse this was.
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1976 Krug Champagne Vintage Brut. VM 94. Krug’s 1976 Vintage, tasted from magnum, is rich, deep and powerful, with Riesling-inflected veins of minerality that run through a core of orange peel, ash and dried flowers. A deeply Pinot leaning wine, the 1976 offers notable richness and breadth throughout. The 1976 vintage in Champagne is remembered for a hot, dry growing season with an early harvest that produced intense powerful wines. Krug’s 1976 Vintage is now fully mature. Well-stored examples should continue to drink well for a number of years, although there is no upside from cellaring bottles further. Interestingly, this 1976 magnum was aged on cork, rather than crown capsule, like the 1979 tasted alongside it. (Drink between 2015-2018)
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1995 Moët & Chandon Champagne Cuvée Dom Pérignon Rosé. VM 94. The 1995 Dom Pérignon Rosé (magnum) is absolutely stellar. Of course, the magnum format helps, especially vis-à-vis the 1996. The 1995 might fall just short of being truly epic, but not by far. Today, it is the wine’s overall balance and harmony that are most captivating. A Champagne with no hard edges and tons of pure appeal, the 1995 Rosé is wonderfully open, soft and expressive today. (Drink between 2015-2025)
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2007 Coche-Dury Meursault Les Rougeots. VM 93. The 2007 Meursault Les Rougeots is consistent with the bottle encountered a few months earlier, that hint of pumpkin and dried honey still lending complexity on the nose. The palate retains the same distinctive oily texture with stem ginger and roasted walnut flavors and the fennel popping up toward the finish to lend a bit of Provençal flair. Wonderful! (Drink between 2021-2040)
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From my cellar: 2011 Coche-Dury Puligny-Montrachet Les Enseignères. BH 91. This compares quite favorably with the extraordinarily good 2010 version (see review herein) with its impressively complex nose of white flowers, pear and quinine suffused nose. The excellent depth continues onto the utterly delicious and seductively textured medium-bodied flavors that offer very fine persistence on the lingering finish. What I especially like about this wine is the mid-palate texture, which is something that Coche consistently coaxes from his villages level wines. While this will certainly reward mid-term cellaring it would be no vinous crime to open a bottle now as it’s really hard to resist! (Drink starting 2019)
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2012 Coche-Dury Meursault Les Rougeots. BH 91. This is very Meursault in style with plenty of roasted hazelnut character adding breadth to the pretty and well-layered combination of freshly sliced citrus, apricot, nectarine and white peach aromas. The palate impression is one where the richness of the mid-palate buffers well the firm acid spine that shapes both the medium-bodied flavors and finish. This terrific effort is still quite young but it may very well be the best of the Coche villages wines in 2012. (Drink starting 2019)
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2010 Domaine Leflaive Chevalier-Montrachet. BH 97. An airy, cool and ultra-refined nose displays distinct lemon-lime and acacia blossom scents include background notes of stone and saline that complement to perfection the intensely mineral-driven middle weight flavors that possess superb precision on the explosive and palate staining finish that seems to just go on and on. This is quite dry; in fact it’s arguably the driest wine in the range yet this is not forbiddingly austere. I very much like the contrast between the sense of focused power and the mouth feel which is almost delicate. This is sheer class and the balance is flawless. This should go down as a classic vintage for this storied wine. A true ‘wow’ wine. (Drink starting 2022)
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2001 Domaine Leflaive Bâtard-Montrachet. VM 98. The 2001 Bâtard is absolutely stunning. What a wine! It’s everything one could ask for, and more. The aromatics alone are breathtaking. On the palate, the 2001 is vibrant, with the oiliness and texture of Bâtard, but no excess weight and exactly the sort of mellow patina a Grand Cru white Burgundy should show at age twenty. Orange confit, spice, almond paste, honey and a kiss of new oak all open with a bit of air. The 2001 is an emotionally moving wine of the very highest level. Magnificent. (Drink between 2021-2026)
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2008 François Raveneau Chablis Grand Cru Les Clos. BH 96. This too is impressively pure and cool with an airy but reserved mix of floral, spice, mineral reduction and iodine notes merging seamlessly into gorgeously intense and almost aggressively stony medium-bodied flavors that exude a subtle sense of harmony, indeed this is Zen-like on the explosive, balanced and lingering finish that positively screams Chablis. This is simply fantastic and while I have a very slight preference for the Valmur, this is certainly an inspired effort as well. If you can find it, don’t miss this either but also like the Valmur, be prepared to be patient. (Drink starting 2020)
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2007 Domaine Roulot Meursault 1er Cru Les Perrières. VM 94+. Bright pale yellow. Soft citrus fruits and crushed rock on the musky, slightly reduced nose. Rich, perfumed and tightly coiled, with a terrific core of acidity intensifying the orange, floral and mineral flavors. Offers compelling cut and concentration but this infant will require several years of aging. Wonderfully refined Perrieres of grand cru class.
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2014 Château de Puligny-Montrachet Chevalier-Montrachet. BH 92-95. Equally discreet wood sets off the beautifully layered nose that blends together notes of citrus, wet stone, rose petal and subtle spice hints. There is excellent verve to the delineated and overtly muscular yet refined big-bodied flavors that possess an abundance of acid-buffering dry extract before terminating in a moderately austere and explicitly saline-infused finish that is like rolling rocks around in your mouth. This is very clearly built-to-age and is going to require at least 5 years to unwind and develop more depth. (Drink starting 2024)
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Belt fish tempura. Japanese pickle tarter. Caviar.
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Japanese Surf Clam and Wild Red Snapper sashimi.
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Chawanmushi with matsutake mushrooms and hairy crab.
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You can see the crab here.
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Scallops. Niyu prefecture. Shiso sauce.
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Sea perch with nori. The open hand rolls are back (actually they never left, we just did).
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Bonito. Two parts. Small one very smoked.
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Monkfish liver.
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Sunomono. Grilled green eyes.
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Baby snapper nigiri.
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Sweet shrimp.
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Shimaji.
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Marinated scallop.
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Barracuda being charred with a hot binochan coal!

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Charred barracuda nigiri.
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Shirako nigiri. Not sure I’ve ever had the sperm sacks as a nigiri!
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Aged blue fin.
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Snow crab hand roll.
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Chu toro.
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O-Toro. All 3 of these tuna pieces came from the same fish.
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Uni hand roll.
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Sea Eel.
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Monkfish liver hand roll.
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Tamago. Again, this is about as much as passes for dessert here. It was top notch tamago however.
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Miso soup.
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The wine lineup.
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Joe travels light.

The sushi at Kaneyoshi was really awesome (again). They specialize in a style of “cured and aged” sushi and it’s all very straight up showcasing the fish. The flavors are subtle and spectacular. It’s not particularly stunty or overdressed at all. And service is really good. The space, while far away and hard to find, is quite lovely once you get inside. We had the whole place taken over of course. The food is light, however, and by the glutton standards of Erick and I this is definitely a “second dinner required” meal.

Our wines were curated by Liz and therefore even more amazing than before! The company was great too.

Like almost all high end Omakase places Kaneyoshi isn’t cheap. The base was $250 back then (it’s now $300 as of May 2022). They charged a lot of corkage too. Probably at least $100 a bottle. The total was hefty.

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Erick and I rolled off in search of second dinner. Thankfully no hiccups tonight.
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We found a little izakaya type place.
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Plastic samples.

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Cabbage Salad.
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Regular miso soup.
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Pork Katsu Curry.
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BBQ Eel box. Needed some fat and carbs!

For more LA dining reviews click here.

For more sushi meals click here.

Related posts:

  1. Kaneyoshi Take 1
  2. Brothers Sushi Two
  3. Soko Sushi
  4. Go Go Gozen
  5. Shunji Second Stage
By: agavin
Comments (1)
Posted in: Food
Tagged as: Champagne, DTLA, Foodie Club, Kaneyoshi, Omakase, Sage Society, Second Dinner, Sushi, Sushi Series
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